Read Taken: A Kept Novella Online

Authors: Sally Bradley

Taken: A Kept Novella (7 page)

BOOK: Taken: A Kept Novella
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“Still in the car. Should we wait here?”

“That might be best. Give me a couple minutes. I’ll call you back.”

“Okay.”

“Wait, Dillan?”

“Yeah?”

“Will you watch who comes in and out? Maybe someone who drives in and just stays in their car? Watching?”

He chuckled. “Like us?”

Jordan smiled as she hung up.

Anna looked up from tucking a suitcase into the closet. “Was that Cameron?”

“No, my brother. He’s here, keeping an eye on things in the parking lot. I wonder if Cam’s seen… anyone.”

Anna glanced at the far bed where the kids were huddled around a tablet. “I’m not sure if I want him to or not.”

“I know exactly what you mean.” Her phone rang, and Cam’s picture popped up. “Here’s your brother.” She answered. “So where are you?”

“I’m home, actually. Watching everything from my front door. Ever seen
Rear Window
? I’m feeling a bit Jimmy Stewart-ish right now.”

“Does that make me Grace Kelly?”

“That sounds about right. When are you going to come over and feed me and let me admire how beautiful you are?”

Anna peeked at Jordan, a smile across her lips.

“Cam, I think your sister heard that.”

“Tell her we’ll behave.”

Her cheeks warmed, remembering their first kiss an hour earlier. “You don’t think anyone followed us?”

“I don’t think so. Your idea of hiding them in your car seems to have worked. If anyone
was
watching.”

That was the big question. “Now what?”

“I guess you can leave. I’ll head there in a bit and see if they need anything.”

Anna brushed by Jordan on her way to the bathroom. “Tell him we’re fine, and he doesn’t need to come.”

“I heard that,” he said.

“Are you still coming here?” Jordan asked.

“No. Although I’m not sure I can sit here for the rest of the evening either.”

“Nothing to do?”

“No one to talk to. I’m feeling kinda lonely, Jordan.”

She smiled at the playful pout in his voice. “You want to come over? We can hang out with my family. Probably get some time to talk alone too.”

“I’m half-terrified and half-jazzed at the idea. Meet you there?”

Jordan grinned. “Meet you there.”

****

Cam’s car was already parked in her parents’ driveway when Jordan pulled in. Dillan and Miska had left the hotel to continue their own date, and Garrett was probably at his downtown condo. She wouldn’t have to share Cam with anyone—except maybe her parents.

How long had Cam been here? And what had the conversation with her parents been like? How much had he told them?

Inside, Cam sat in her living room with Mom and Dad, the three of them talking while a Cubs game played on the TV.

Cam stood when she entered, smiling her way, but Dad spoke first. “You do know, Jordan, that he’s a Reds fan?”

Cam chuckled.

Jordan met his gaze. So there
had
been a conversation. “I’m willing to make sacrifices.”

Dad shook his head, pretending to be appalled.

“Mom, Dad, we’re going out on the deck to talk.”

“Fine. But don’t listen to a word he says about baseball.”

Outside, the sky had faded to periwinkles and purples, magenta, and the faintest peach.

Jordan skipped the patio table—too close to the kitchen window—for the top step of the two-level deck and sat down.

Cam seated himself beside her. “That went well.”

“You talked to my parents?”

“I did. I told them I was very interested in you.”

It would have been nice to have witnessed that conversation herself. “Very, huh? And they said…?”

“They seemed good with it. No one called me too old or you too young. Your dad actually seemed to like the idea.”

“And my mom?”

“I guess I didn’t catch her reaction.”

“If she didn’t say anything, she’s probably good with it too.” Now for her brothers. “Have you talked to Dillan or Garrett?”

“I told Dillan tonight. I called him before I called you. He thinks we were slowpokes.” He eyed her, clearly thinking about how to say something.

And evidently struggling with it.

She nudged him with her shoulder. “What?”

He linked his fingers together and frowned at them. “I don’t want to be slow about the rest of this.”

The rest of this… His meaning dawned on her. She widened her eyes and faked a shocked expression. “Are you asking me to elope?”

“No.” He grinned at the vast, empty park beyond the backyard. “I’d like to have a good relationship with my future in-laws, seeing as how they may be the only parent figures I ever have.”

“Did you tell them about your sister?”

“Not yet. I’m not sure if… I would have, until everything that happened tonight.” He slid his hand over hers and wove their fingers together. “I don’t want them thinking I’m putting you in any danger. And then I have to stop and think. Am I?” He met her gaze. “Do you think I’m putting you in danger?”

When he held her hand like this? Shared the most private part of his heart with her? “No,” she whispered.

“Good.”

But he let her hand go and rubbed his palms together.

Why did he go back and forth like that? Comfortable then uncomfortable in a few seconds?

Evidently there was more he needed to say. If only he’d spit it out. While it was tempting to ask him what it was, it’d be best if he told her on his terms. She shouldn’t force whatever it was out of him before he was ready.

Before they were both ready.

“So we’re not going to elope, we’re not going to get married before Dillan and Miska do. What’s the plan, then?”

“Get to know each other. Well.”

“I like that plan.”

“Maybe you will, maybe you won’t.”

What did that mean? “Why? Is your favorite color neon pink?”

He pretended surprise. “You saw my bedroom?”

She laughed. “Actually, I saw the toys on the stairs Saturday and wondered if you had some… toy issues.”

“Really? You hid that well.”

“You don’t have a bedroom full of stuffed bears? Or Matchbox cars all over your pink dresser?”

“Umm…”

She gave him a playful shove. “Stop it.”

“Avery’s the one into cars, actually. Logan’s outgrowing them, but she loves them. We’ve got a racetrack set up in the basement. The two of us spend good time down there.”

What an awesome uncle he was. “Maybe she’ll grow up to be a racecar driver.”

Cam grimaced. “Her mom would love that.”

Silence settled around them, and nature filled it. A bird chirped high in one of the trees, and across the yard another answered it. Were they a couple? A family? Were there young birds somewhere close by?

“So.” Cam leaned forward, elbows on his thighs, and rubbed his palms together again. And again. He bit his lip, then finally nodded as if he’d come to some decision. “I, uh, got my girlfriend pregnant in high school.”

Oh.

“My senior year. Early in the year. She, umm…”

Jordan’s throat tightened.

“I already told you about my parents. How pro-choice they are. Her family wasn’t. They were a lot more conservative, but of course I had my parents’ viewpoint on it. Just end it, you know?”

When would he look at her? When he’d finished?

“That’s what I wanted her to do, but she wasn’t sure. So I had her talk to my parents. They weren’t happy with me, but they felt there was an easy solution. That neither of us had to suffer.”


Suffer
?”

She didn’t realize she’d said it out loud until Cam looked her way. “That was their word. You know, we didn’t need to have those consequences. We didn’t have to let it ‘become a child.’” He used his fingers for air quotes. “I just went with it. Thought sure, we can fix this. And I didn’t listen to her. At all.”

A mosquito buzzed by her ear. Jordan swatted it away, her hand feeling weak.

“It all really hit me—what I’d done to her—when Anna went through it. The pressure to abort, knowing it wasn’t right. Knowing it was a real child in there. A little person.” His jaw clenched as he sat silent for several seconds. “I was about the biggest jerk a guy could be. I didn’t care what my girlfriend thought. I just wanted that baby gone, and I was getting angry that she was so hesitant about it. Always crying. Always…” A small groan escaped him, and he closed his eyes, a deep breath dropping his shoulders. “I pressured her. Hard. Convinced her finally. And she did it. Because I wanted it.”

Oh, Cam
. Her eyes fell shut, but moisture leaked from them. Tears for a lost child, for the teenage girl he’d pushed to do something she didn’t want to do, for Cam himself—all these years later.

And for her own pain, right in this moment. For knowing more of what was in his past.

“Jordan.” He pulled her to him, and she rested her head against his collarbone. His words were deeper than normal, his voice rougher. “I’m sorry.”

She nodded against him. Deep down, she’d known there was something more. Cam had only become a Christian a handful of years ago. And his silence had made everyone wonder what kind of a life he’d come from. So while this wasn’t a surprise exactly…

“I hate telling you this. I hate that I could have a teenager now. I wish I did. I wish so much that I did.”

“Cam, I’m not mad.” She sat up and wiped beneath her eyes. “I’m sorry for all of it too.”

He watched her closely, as if he wasn’t quite sure he believed her.

She forced a shaky smile for him. “I’m okay. Really.”

His mouth twitched into a smile. “Thank you.”

She nodded.

He pulled her close again and pressed his lips against her hair. “You’re awesome,” he breathed above her ear.

And so was he. Look how far he’d come from what he’d been. “What happened to her?”

He released her and spoke toward the park again. “I haven’t heard anything about her in the last few years, but last I did hear… Her life’s a mess.”

“Guilt?”

“I think so. I realize now that she was trying all kinds of things to self-medicate. She went wild, then joined some weird religion. I heard she tried to kill herself in college. She just became a completely different person, swinging from one extreme to the other.”

Looking for help. For answers.

“And then Anna gets into a similar situation and refuses to have an abortion. I didn’t get it. I didn’t push her to do it—I’d learned at least that much. But I watched her. Listened. Helped however I could.”

“To make up for…” How did she finish that line?

“I don’t think so. It just confused me why she would risk everything for a child that wasn’t even hers. I mean, I understood at first. If she didn’t give that child a voice, no one else would. But I really thought that once the parents refused to be convinced, she’d say okay.”

“But she didn’t.”

He shook his head. “Just the opposite. She told me it was wrong, that the baby had been given life, and she would not end it. Would
not
. I’d argue, and we’d talk about it. About God giving life. About what the Bible said about life. Did you know that the church fathers spoke out against abortion?”

“Really?”

“Yeah. I started reading up on it, and that led to more talking about the Bible, about what the church fathers believed as compared to what I
thought
they believed—”

“Which was?”

He shook his head. “I was clueless, Jordan. Knew nothing. But I was learning. And Anna was grieving over Tony and talking about how she’d see him in heaven again. I even told her not to worry about the baby, that she’d see her in heaven too.” He grimaced. “I still can’t believe I said that about Sophie.”

How had she not known that there was so much behind Cam? So much that had led him to where he was today? “Clearly it’s not how you feel now.”

“No.” A soft smile covered his lips. “I became a Christian because of Sophie. Because of Anna. She fought for what she knew to be right. If she hadn’t, I never would have bothered to ask why life mattered. Why Anna was about to be stuck, I thought, with someone else’s disabled child. Why she was willing to lose so much for a less than perfect life. That got me searching, Jordan.
Me.
I look back and see that God used a supposedly imperfect Sophie to bring me to him. To show me how imperfect I was without him. How I needed him. How much he’d sacrificed to give
me
life. And when I got it, it just… Jordan, it blew me away.”

A different kind of tear filled her eyes now. “That’s amazing.”

“Yeah. It is.” He searched her face. “I
am
sorry that I had to tell you what I’ve done. I wish I could undo it all. For the sake of everyone involved. But I know God’s forgiven me. I know that.”

“Which is why you’re helping Anna so much.”

“No, I’m doing that because it’s right. Letting Sophie be born was only the beginning of choosing life instead of abortion. Everything I do now is because it’s what God wants me to do—to help a widow and her kids. To stand up for what’s right, no matter what some law might say.”

Jordan wrapped her arm around his and curled up against him, her head on his shoulder. The old Cam was hard to picture. She couldn’t imagine this typically quiet, calm man doing—thinking—what he had.

How God had changed him. And how grateful she was for it.

“What’s going on in your head?”

“That I’m glad you told me.”

“Really?”

“Cam, I want to know you. The good, the bad. The current you, the past. I want to know why you’re you.”

His head rested on top of hers. “I’ve dreaded having to tell you this.”

“I know.”

“How did I get so lucky to end up with you?”

Jordan sat up and smiled at him. “Keep talking.”

With a chuckle, he rested his forehead against hers, his breath warm on her face. “I really admire how you’ve handled this. Grace Kelly has nothing on you.”

“Thank you.”

His lips brushed hers once, twice, then pulled back. “I also don’t think you’ve had time to process everything. You might not feel so understanding in the morning.”

“Cam—”

“I mean it. I’m giving you room to get mad at me if you need to. To
hurt
, Jordan. I don’t want you to pretend you’re okay if you’re not.”

BOOK: Taken: A Kept Novella
8.74Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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